Our News

‘Upcoming Screenings’ Category

March 4, 2011  stacys

Screening: The Insular Empire: America in the Mariana Islands

Conferences - Coast-to-Coast!

The Insular Empire: America in the Mariana Islands will be screening at two upcoming academic conferences this month:
Critical Ethnic Studies and the Future of Genocide, March 10-12, 2011, at the University of California at Riverside and  the 7th Annual Indigenous and American Studies Storyteller’s Conference,  March 25-26, 2011, at the State University of New York at Buffalo.

0 COMMENTS

February 22, 2011  stacys

Screening of Body & Soul: Diana & Kathy

Alice Elliott’s film, Body & Soul: Diana & Kathy will be screened on March 10th at MIT as a collaborative event between the Women’s and Gender Studies Program and the Student Disabilities Services program.  The film will screen again in late March in New York City when one of the film’s subjects, Diana Braun, stops by after her trip to Uzbekistan!

0 COMMENTS

April 16, 2010  stacys

ASK NOT at the American Psychological Association Spring Meeting

Filmmaker Johnny Symons will lead a discussion and screening of Ask Not at the APA Division 39 Spring Meeting in Chicago this April. ASK NOT is a groundbreaking and deeply personal PBS film illuminating the real stories and psychological effects of the military’s controversial ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy, and includes a comprehensive account of its remarkable history and implementation.

The timing couldn’t be better with the national conversation surrounding the policy ramping up, and everyone from the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and former Vice President Dick Cheney advocating for the policy’s repeal. As has always been the case, the military has authority to modify how “don’t ask, don’t tell” is applied, even if Congress takes no action to suspend or repeal the policy.

Perhaps the most provocative development, therefore, is the recent announcement by Defense Secretary Robert Gates announcing substantive enforcement changes including approval of discharges by a one-star flag officer or above, the requirement that third parties give information under oath, and the disallowing of confidential information provided to lawyers, psychotherapists, and clergy to be used in support of discharges. In his remarks, Secretary Gates said he believes the modifications provide “a greater measure of common sense and common decency to a process for handling what are difficult and complex issues for all involved.”

0 COMMENTS